Tag Archives: color selection

I recently received a marketing email from Brewers, a wholesale sewing supply company. They included in their email a link to a blog post on the subject of color palettes that I found very interesting. After reading the blog post, I experimented with creating color palettes from a few of my photographs using color palette software available from Sherwin Williams. They of course intend you to use it to select paint colors the next time you decorate. And that is a great thing to do with it. But for us quilters, it is a wonderful resource for designing a color palette. (link to the original Brewer’s post is at the end of this one)

Upload a favorite photo and follow the instructions. You will have to create an account to save your color chip, but it just requires a user name, email address, and password – so no big deal. Once you have looked at the color chip card – be sure to click on the “edit colors” button because you will find there are some more colors hidden behind the first five, and you want to see them. I only discovered this because the first photo I am showing you below came up with NO pink in the first five colors! So I went looking and found them. Be sure to drag and drop the colors around so that the first five or so are the colors you would really use in a quilt. Then save the changes. Click on the “edit colors” button again to make the secondary colors show, if you want them. Then right click your mouse on the picture and choose “Save As”, giving your new chipcard a name that you will be able to remember. You should be able to find it again using the search feature in Windows Explorer or whatever software you use to find files on your computer. On my computer, these files ended up under the “Pictures” folder.

So here are my first results. I think these chip cards would be a great help to fabric shopping!

I thought the brown, mustard yellow, and dark red were interesting. I wouldn’t have pulled those out of the original photo, and yet I think they are interesting additions to the color palette. In limited quantity, one of them would make a good accent color or “zinger”.

And a sunrise photo:

Sherwin Williams chip card from my Sunrise photo

Interesting, aren’t they? I especially like the sunrise photo results because I would have had trouble coming up with those colors. I would have been inclined to select more vivid yellow/orange/pink shades.